Process Engineer Toolkit > User's Guide > Tools Reference > Search Engine > Dependency List
SearchEngine: Building the Dependency ListTopicsThe word database is constructed by parsing a series of HTML or
plain text files. This chapter explains how the dependency list is constructed,
specifying a start file, and the process of parsing linked files. File name conventionsSome confusion can arise when the system path separator character is not the same as the URL path separator character "/". There are two simple rules which help distinguish which character should be used:
File names and pathsURLs
The start pointThe -f option is the only required SearchEngine option. It tells
the SearchEngine the name of the HTML file to use in constructing
the dependency list. This file is parsed for words, and all links, such as <a
href="filename.html"> are then checked. In order to reduce recompilation time, the SearchEngine stores the parsed information to local storage, so that only HTML files which have been modified since the last compilation need to be parsed again. These intermediary data files are stored in a data directory, appended to the current working directory. For example, if the current working directory is: /www/rational/application/search/doc/ and the file to parse is: /www/html/index.html then the intermediary data file is stored in: /www/rational/application/search/doc/data/www/html/index.html.data You may override this default data directory by specifying your own using the -p option. Removing documents from the listIn some circumstances, linked documents must be excluded from the dependency list. There are many reasons for doing so; the link might not be a text document, such as a reference to a .zip file, or .tar file, or might be a programming language file, or an applet page. Other examples are links to other manuals or groups of HTML documents, which have their own separate search databases. How easy or difficult this is to achieve depends on how the HTML documents are structured. If they are all lumped together in one directory, then each document must be fully specified, if they are in different directories, then it is enough to specify the directory and use a filter. Removing a specific document from the dependency listTo remove a specific document from the dependency list, use the -xu option, and specify the document's URL path and filename components, for example: -xu /www/rational/application/search/doc/index.html Removing multiple documents from the dependency listTo remove multiple documents from the dependency list, use the -xu option and a filter using the wildcard character '*'. For example: -xu */index.html In this example, all URLs ending with /index.html will be excluded from the dependency list. Another more dangerous example of filtering is: -xu /www/extawt/* In the above example, all URLs beginning with /www/extawt/ will be excluded from the dependency list. Finally an even more dangerous example of filtering is: -xu */extawt/* In this example, all URLs containing /extawt/ will be excluded from the dependency list. No other combinations of the wildcard character '*' are valid. A filter definition of */extawt/*remove.* will result in a (probably useless) filter to ignore all URLs containing /extawt/*remove., and not the probable intention of ignoring all URLs containing /extawt/ and also remove. The wildcard character '*' can appear at the start of the URL, and/or at the end of the URL, anywhere else it is treated as an ordinary character. Warning: Filters can damage your database...The last two examples of filtering above are dangerous in that they can do more filtering than perhaps originally intended. To understand what can go wrong, we'll look at an example for a fictitious sports site. We assume that the site documents are all stored in a root directory, called /sport, with the various sports being sub-directories of this, for example /sport/sailing, /sport/skiing, etc, and that there are links not only from each sport to the root directory, but also between sports. We decide that we want to build a general database, using sport and all sub-directories not related to a specific sport, and several specialized databases, one for each specific sport. In the first case, we could remove all the specific sport sub-directories from the dependency list by using a filter for each one; -xu /sport/sailing/* -xu /sport/skiing/* -xu /sport/surfing/* ... However, when we come to creating the dependency list for the /sport/sailing sub-directory we want to remove all documents in the root /sport directory from the dependency list, because they are already covered by the general database. At first you might think that the following does just that; -xu /sport/* -xu /sport/skiing/* -xu /sport/surfing/* ... with the first line removing all documents in the root directory. When you compile the list, starting with say /sport/sailing/index.html, the resulting dependency list contains only that document. So where are all those other /sport/sailing documents? The answer is that that first line filter removed them from the list - remember, /sport/* means: remove all documents beginning with /sport/, so a document such as /sport/sailing/AmericasCup.html, which does begin with /sport/ will be removed from the dependency list. How, then, can the /sport directory be removed, without having to specify each document in that directory separately? You use a directory exclusion filter: -xu /sport// By placing two URL path separator characters "//" at the end of the URL, we can tell the SearchEngine to remove all documents in the /sport directory from the dependency list, but not documents in sub-directories of /sport. Similarly, if you want to create a database of a sub-topic, say /sport/sailing/windsurfing you will have to add directory exclusion filters for each level; /sport and /sport/sailing; -xu /sport// -xu /sport/sailing// Generating the listIn addition to the dependency list, the SearchEngine also accumulates a list
of non-text documents, such as images, or sound files, links to other sites,
and missing links. As an example, the list generated for this manual is presented below: Document dependency list for file://C:/www/rational/application/search/doc/index.html file://C:/www/rational/application/search/doc/index.html file://C:/www/rational/application/search/doc/applet.html file://C:/www/rational/application/search/doc/database.html file://C:/www/rational/application/search/doc/dependency.html file://C:/www/rational/application/search/doc/filters.html file://C:/www/rational/application/search/doc/installing.html file://C:/www/rational/application/search/doc/overview.html Data dependency list for file://C:/www/rational/application/search/doc/index.html file://C:/www/images/green-ball.gif file://C:/www/images/background.gif External links list for file://C:/www/rational/application/search/doc/index.html http://www.javasoft.com mailto:bill@microsoft.com |
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